5/18
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Filter Stories
Penn In the News
Your Tweets Can Reveal How Much Money You Earn
Daniel Preotiuc-Pietro of the School of Arts & Sciences is cited for leading a study that revealed how Twitter behavior can predict users’ income level.
Penn In the News
Boss Make Your Blood Boil? Here Are Six Ways to Prevent Anger From Ruining Your Career
Sigal Barsade of the Wharton School suggests that “anger is not all bad.”
Penn In the News
Something Borrowed
Al Filreis of the School of Arts & Sciences is quoted about Kenneth Goldsmith’s poetry techniques.
Penn In the News
Video: Spark Therapeutics Gene Therapy Hits Goals in Blindness
Albert Maguire of the Perelman School of Medicine talks about testing a gene therapy product to help restore vision.
Penn In the News
Race and Slurs in the Classroom
Microaggressions: everyday offenses or digs, sometimes subtle and unintentional, directed at a person based on his or her race. It’s a divisive term which some say has helped enable the “coddling” of college students nationwide. Other still say it’s given a name to the kinds of insidious discrimination that students of color and others have faced in the college classroom for generations. Like it or not, microaggression is now part of the mainstream college climate vocabulary, as a recent, public case at Mount Holyoke College and others like it illustrate.
Penn In the News
Why I Was Fired
In August 2014, I was fired from a tenured position at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The firing made me a free-speech darling — or the world’s most violent person since Stalin, depending on your perspective. It also sparked a debate about academic freedom, faculty governance, the Israel-Palestine conflict, and the role of social media in university life. That debate rages with no resolution in sight.
Penn In the News
Dartmouth Removes New Native American Head Amid Ethnicity Questions
Dartmouth College has removed the new director of its Native American Program after tribal officials and alumni accused her of misrepresenting herself as an American Indian. The Ivy League school hired Susan Taffe Reed last month to serve as a liaison between the college and Native Americans, saying her role as president of the Eastern Delaware Nations would be instrumental in helping guide Indian students. But her appointment quickly became mired in controversy as some Native Americans said Dartmouth didn’t sufficiently vet Ms.
Penn In the News
What Doesn’t Work Against Hot Flashes
Sarah Mathews of the Perelman School of Medicine comments on a study that could raise patients’ awareness about herbal supplements and medications not regulated by the FDA that are said to help treat menopausal hot flashes.
Penn In the News
Audio: Our Microbiome and Our Health
Gary Wu and Frederic Bushman of the Perelman School of Medicine and Tracy Bale of the School of Veterinary Medicine join a discussion about understanding the microbiome.
Penn In the News
HBCUs’ Role in the Social Justice Movement
Marybeth Gasman of the Graduate School of Education co-writes an article about the role of historically black colleges and universities in the social justice movement.